MSP Pricing Models Explained: How MSPs Charge and What You Should Pay
Understanding how MSPs price their services is essential whether you're a business owner evaluating MSPs, a technician understanding your MSP's business model, or an MSP owner benchmarking your pricing. This guide breaks down every major pricing model, what's typically included, and what you should expect to pay.
For current market benchmarks, see our MSP pricing comparison 2026. For calculating the total cost of MSP services, use our MSP cost calculator.
The Major Pricing Models
Per-User Pricing
How it works: You pay a fixed monthly fee per user (employee), regardless of how many devices they use.
Typical pricing: $150-$300 per user per month (Australia, 2026)
What's usually included: - RMM monitoring and management - Patch management - Antivirus/EDR - Service desk support (phone, email, portal) - Basic M365 administration - Backup monitoring - Quarterly reporting
Pros: - Predictable costs — easy to budget - Scales naturally with headcount - Simple to understand and administer - Aligns costs with people (the actual users of IT)
Cons: - Can be expensive for device-heavy environments - Doesn't account for user complexity (a receptionist vs. a developer cost the same) - May not include all services you need - Can feel expensive for part-time or seasonal staff
Best for: Most SMBs. Predictable, scalable, and simple. This is the default for a reason.
Per-Device Pricing
How it works: You pay a fixed monthly fee per managed device (workstation, server, or other endpoint).
Typical pricing: $80-$150 per workstation, $200-$500 per server (monthly)
What's usually included: - RMM agent deployment - Patch management - Antivirus/EDR - Basic support for that device - Monitoring and alerting
Pros: - Cost scales with infrastructure, not headcount - Good for environments with shared devices (manufacturing, retail) - Transparent — you know exactly what you're paying for
Cons: - Doesn't account for user support (the human using the device) - Device count can be harder to predict than headcount - May require separate user support agreements - Server costs can be significant
Best for: Environments with shared workstations, high device-to-user ratios, or businesses that want infrastructure-focused management.
Flat-Rate / All-Inclusive Pricing
How it works: One monthly fee covers everything. All users, all devices, all standard services.
Typical pricing: $2,000-$10,000+ per month (depending on business size and scope)
What's usually included: - Everything in per-user pricing - Additional services like security, backup, and compliance - May include project work (within limits) - vCIO consulting
Pros: - Maximum predictability — one number, no surprises - Simplifies budgeting - Encourages comprehensive coverage
Cons: - Can be expensive for smaller businesses - May include services you don't need - Hard to compare against other MSPs - Risk of scope creep (what "everything" means can vary)
Best for: Larger businesses that want simplicity and comprehensive coverage. Often used by MSPs targeting the mid-market.
Tiered Pricing (Bronze/Silver/Gold)
How it works: Three or more service tiers at different price points, each with different service levels.
Typical tiers:
| Tier | Price/User/Month | What's Included |
|---|---|---|
| Bronze | $120-180 | Basic monitoring, patching, antivirus, limited help desk |
| Silver | $180-250 | Bronze + M365 management, backup, security basics |
| Gold | $250-350 | Silver + advanced security, vCIO, priority support, projects |
Pros: - Clients can choose the level that fits their budget and needs - Clear value differentiation between tiers - Upsell opportunities as clients grow
Cons: - Can create confusion about what's included at each tier - "Gold" tier may still not cover everything - Clients may choose the cheapest tier and be disappointed - Complex to administer
Best for: MSPs that want to serve multiple market segments. Works well when tiers are clearly defined and clients understand what they're getting.
Hybrid / Custom Pricing
How it works: A base per-user or per-device fee plus additional charges for specific services.
Typical structure: - Base: $150 per user per month - Add-on: Advanced security +$30/user - Add-on: Backup management +$200/month - Add-on: Project work at $150/hour - Add-on: On-site support at $100/visit
Pros: - Maximum flexibility - Clients pay only for what they need - Transparent line-item pricing
Cons: - Can be complex to manage - Unexpected costs if not managed carefully - Requires good scope documentation - Invoicing can be confusing
Best for: Businesses with specific needs that don't fit standard packages. Also common when MSPs are transitioning between models.
What's Typically Included vs. Add-On
Understanding what's standard and what's extra is crucial:
Usually included (standard): - RMM monitoring - Patch management - Basic antivirus/EDR - Service desk (remote support) - Basic M365 administration - Quarterly reviews/reporting
Usually add-on: - Advanced security (SOC, SIEM, MDR) - Backup management and testing - Project work (migrations, upgrades) - On-site support - vCIO/strategic consulting - Compliance management (Essential 8, ISO 27001) - After-hours support premium - Third-party vendor management
Always clarify: What are the limits? Is there a cap on support tickets? What's the maximum project size included? What happens when you exceed the scope?
Australian Market Benchmarks (2026)
SMB (1-50 users): - Per-user: $150-$250/user/month - Total: $1,500-$12,500/month - Expect: Standard support, basic security, M365 management
Mid-market (50-200 users): - Per-user: $130-$200/user/month - Total: $6,500-$40,000/month - Expect: Enhanced security, dedicated account management, more proactive services
Enterprise (200+ users): - Per-user: $100-$180/user/month - Total: $20,000+/month - Expect: Full security stack, vCIO, custom SLAs, dedicated team
See our salary benchmark for how these costs relate to MSP staffing models.
How to Evaluate MSP Pricing
Total Cost of Ownership
Don't just compare the monthly fee. Consider:
- What's included? Two MSPs at $200/user might include very different services.
- What's the response time? Faster response = higher cost, but also less downtime.
- What's the security posture? Basic antivirus vs. EDR/SOC makes a huge difference.
- What's the contract term? Monthly flexibility vs. annual discount.
- What's the exit cost? Can you leave easily, or are you locked in?
The "Cheap MSP" Trap
The cheapest MSP is rarely the best value. Here's why:
- Low prices mean thin margins
- Thin margins mean understaffed teams
- Understaffed teams mean slow responses and poor quality
- Poor quality means more downtime and security risk
- More downtime and risk means higher total cost
Our hidden costs of MSPs guide covers the hidden expenses of choosing on price alone.
Questions to Ask About Pricing
- What's included in the monthly fee?
- What services are add-ons?
- How do you handle out-of-scope work?
- What's the notice period for price changes?
- Are there annual price increases? How much?
- What happens if I need to add users mid-contract?
- What's the exit process and any associated costs?
Related Resources
- MSP Pricing Comparison 2026 — Current market benchmarks
- MSP Cost Calculator — Calculate total cost of ownership
- Hidden Costs of MSPs — What they don't tell you
- MSP Contract Checklist — Negotiate properly
- MSP Due Diligence Checklist — Evaluate before signing
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